Your ex didn’t bring the kids back on time. Again.
Or maybe it’s worse than that. Maybe she moved out of state without telling you. Maybe she’s scheduling activities during your parenting time without asking. Maybe your son told you he didn’t come last weekend because “Mom said we had plans.”
Whatever the specifics, the feeling is the same: you have a court order, it’s not being followed, and nobody seems to care.
I’ve been in that exact spot. I spent two years and $250,000 fighting for 50/50 custody of my son Tanner. I won. And even after winning, enforcement has been its own war.
So let me tell you what I wish someone had laid out for me from the start — what your actual options are, what works, what doesn’t, and what the system gets wrong about fathers who just want their court orders respected.
First: Your Court Order Is a Legal Document, Not a Suggestion
This sounds obvious. It isn’t. Because the way the family court system treats custody violations makes you feel like your order is written on a napkin.
A custody order is issued by a judge. It has the full weight of the court behind it. When someone violates it, they are technically in contempt of court — which is a legal offense that can carry fines, jail time, or modification of the custody arrangement.
In practice? It rarely plays out that cleanly. But knowing the legal framework matters, because it determines what steps you can take.
The Two Types of Contempt
Courts distinguish between civil contempt and criminal contempt in custody cases, and the difference matters more than most fathers realize.
Civil contempt is about forcing compliance. You file a motion saying your ex isn’t following the order, and the court’s goal is to get them to comply going forward. The penalties are designed to coerce — “you’ll keep getting fined until you follow the schedule” — not to punish. This is what most custody contempt motions look like.
Criminal contempt is about punishment for past violations. It’s harder to prove, requires a higher standard of evidence, and courts are much more reluctant to go there in family cases. You’ll almost never see criminal contempt in a first offense. But repeated, documented violations can get you there.
The practical takeaway: when you file for contempt, you’re almost always filing civil. Your goal is to make the court pay attention and enforce what it already ordered.
What You Need Before You File
Documentation. That’s it. That’s the whole answer.
I know you’re tired of hearing this, but the fathers who win contempt motions are the ones who show up with evidence that makes the violation undeniable. Here’s what that looks like:
- A log of every violation — date, time, what the order says, what actually happened. Not “she’s always late.” Specific: “March 3, 2026. Order states pickup at 6pm Friday. Arrived at 6pm. Children not made available until 7:45pm. Text exchange attached.”
- Text messages and emails — screenshot everything. Don’t paraphrase. Let her words speak for themselves.
- Witness statements — if someone was with you during a denied pickup, get it in writing.
- School and activity records — if she’s enrolling the kids in things during your time, get documentation from the school or organization showing the schedule conflict.
- Police reports — if you showed up for your court-ordered time and were denied access, call the non-emergency line and file a report. Not because the cops will do anything in the moment (they usually won’t enforce civil custody orders), but because that report is evidence.
The judge doesn’t care about your feelings. The judge cares about patterns and proof. Give them both.
Filing a Motion for Contempt: The Process
The actual process varies by state, but the general steps look like this:
- File a Motion for Contempt (sometimes called a “Motion to Show Cause” or “Motion for Rule to Show Cause”) with your county’s family court. This is a formal document that lays out exactly which provisions of the order were violated, when, and how.
- Serve your ex. She has to be officially notified. This usually requires a process server or sheriff’s service.
- Attend the hearing. The judge will hear both sides. You present your evidence. She presents her defense. The judge decides whether contempt occurred.
Filing fees vary by jurisdiction — anywhere from $50 to $300 in most states. If you’re representing yourself (pro se), many courts have self-help forms available. If you have an attorney, they’ll handle the filing.
Timeline is the hard part. Most courts take 2-6 weeks to schedule a contempt hearing. Some take longer. During that time, the violations may continue. That’s not a reason to wait — it’s a reason to keep documenting.
What the Judge Can Actually Do
If the court finds your ex in contempt, the potential consequences include:
- Make-up parenting time — you get the time back that was taken from you. This is the most common remedy.
- Fines — financial penalties for the violation.
- Attorney’s fees — she pays your legal costs for having to enforce the order. This one is big, and judges award it more often than you’d think.
- Modification of the custody order — if violations are chronic, the court can change the arrangement. This can go either direction, so be careful what you wish for, but persistent interference with a father’s parenting time is a factor courts do consider.
- Jail time — rare in civil contempt for custody violations, but it exists as an option. Courts can order a purge condition (“comply with the order and you’re released”). It happens more often than people think in extreme cases.
The Hard Truth About Enforcement
Here’s what nobody tells you: the system is broken when it comes to enforcement.
Courts are slow. Filing takes money. Some judges treat custody violations like minor inconveniences rather than what they are — someone interfering with a child’s relationship with their parent.
I’ve seen fathers with binders full of documented violations get told to “work it out” by judges who wouldn’t tolerate the same behavior if the roles were reversed. That bias is real, and pretending it doesn’t exist doesn’t help you prepare for it.
But here’s what’s also true: fathers who document meticulously, file motions properly, and show up prepared DO get results. Not always on the first try. Not always as fast as they should. But the legal system does eventually respond to clear patterns of violation backed by solid evidence.
The fathers who lose are the ones who vent on social media instead of building a file. The ones who yell at their ex in the parking lot instead of writing it down. The ones who assume the system won’t help them so they don’t even try.
Three Things You Should Do This Week
If your ex is violating your custody order, here’s your immediate action plan:
- Start a custody journal today. Every exchange, every schedule change, every denial of time. Date, time, what happened, who was present. Digital is fine — just make sure it’s backed up.
- Save every communication. Texts, emails, voicemails. Back them up to a cloud service. Courts love seeing the actual words.
- Consult with your attorney about filing for contempt. If you don’t have an attorney, most family law firms offer free or low-cost consultations. Know your options before you need them urgently.
Your court order exists because a judge determined it was in your child’s best interest. When someone violates it, they’re not just disrespecting you — they’re working against what’s best for your kids.
You fought for that order. Now fight to enforce it. Document everything. File when the pattern is clear. And don’t let anyone tell you that being a father means accepting less than what the court already gave you.
